87 N.Y. 40 | NY | 1881
This action was commenced to foreclose a mortgage executed to the plaintiff by George Martin, and a deficiency judgment was demanded against the defendant Mrs. Burdick, on the ground that the mortgaged premises were, subsequent to the date of the mortgage, conveyed to her, subject to the mortgage, by a deed in which it was stated that she assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage. She and Martin both *44
appeared and answered the complaint. She alleged that she never assumed or agreed to pay the mortgage; that she intrusted Martin to procure the deed to be drawn, and that he, without her knowledge or consent, fraudulently procured a clause to be inserted in the deed binding her to pay the mortgage; that she accepted the deed, believing he had drawn it according to the prior agreement, and that she did not know that the deed contained the clause until about the time of the commencement of this action, and she demanded, beside other relief, that the complaint be dismissed as to her, and that the deed be reformed by striking out the clause thus fraudulently inserted. The defendant Martin, in his answer, simply set up proceedings commenced and pending against him in bankruptcy. Upon the trial, the plaintiff proved the mortgage from Martin to it, and the amount due thereon, and put in evidence the deed from Martin to Mrs. Burdick, which contained a clause reciting that she assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage, and then rested. Mrs. Burdick then offered to prove the facts alleged in her answer, both as a defense and for the purpose of reforming the deed, and they were excluded, apparently upon the ground that an issue had not been tendered to Martin. Upon appeal by Mrs. Burdick to the General Term, the judgment of the Trial Term was affirmed upon the ground that her failure to examine the deed and know its contents was such negligence on her part as deprived her of the right to assert the alleged fraud or to have any relief on account thereof; and the decision was mainly based upon the authority of the case of Long v. Warren (
To sustain the ruling at the Trial Term it is claimed that by a cross-bill, or in some other way, Mrs. Burdick should have tendered an issue to Martin as to the alleged fraud; that she could defend the action only by a reformation of the deed, and that she could not have such reformation upon an issue joined solely between her and the plaintiff.
We are of opinion that the trial judge fell into error. This action is in equity, and Martin is a party and was thus before the court. A complete determination of every question in *45
which the plaintiff is interested arising upon the defense interposed by Mrs. Burdick could be made without the presence of any other party defendant but her. It has a bond against Martin, and its claim upon that could in no way be affected by a successful defense on the part of Mrs. Burdick. Its remedy upon that would be just as perfect as it was before Martin executed the deed to her. If, however, it desired to have him bound by the adjudication in the litigation between it and her, it could have given him notice of her defense, and offered him the future management of the suit, which would have made the adjudication binding upon him so far as it affected the relations between it and him. (Andrews v. Gillespie,
But if the plaintiff desired an adjudication which should finally settle all the rights of all the parties, it could have made Martin, who was a party to the action, a party to the litigation, and this could have been done without a cross-action or another action of any kind. The power of the court for this purpose would have been ample under its general jurisdiction, and under section 274 of the Code of Procedure, which provides that "judgment may be given for or against one or more of several plaintiffs and for or against one or more of several defendants, and it may *46 determine the ultimate rights of the parties as between themselves."
Section 521 of the Code of Civil Procedure, enacted since this action was commenced, which provides that "where the judgment may determine the ultimate rights of two or more defendants, as between themselves, a defendant, who requires such a determination, must demand it in his answer, and must, at least ten days before the trial, serve a copy of his answer upon the attorney for each of the defendants to be affected by the determination," confers no new power upon the courts acting in equity, but is simply a regulation of practice. The court had the power, in some mode to be prescribed by it, to make Martin a party to the litigation, so that he would have been bound by any adjudication made therein; and if the plaintiff, for its own protection or its own purposes, desired that he should be made a party, it should have invoked the exercise of such power, but it could not properly demand that Mrs. Burdick should be entirely deprived of her defense.
It is the distinguishing feature of courts of equity that they are not bound by cast-iron rules as to the forms of their judgments, and that the relief which they may administer is flexible, adapted to the exigency of the case in hand and it cannot be doubted that in this case, having control of all the parties, the court could have made a full determination of the entire controversy between them, growing out of the facts alleged in Mrs. Burdick's answer; and this it could have done upon the application of either one of the parties.
We are also constrained to differ from the learned General Term. The doctrine laid down by this court in Long v. Warren
(
In the case of Welles v. Yates (
A further citation of authorities is not needful. It is clear that to deny Mrs. Burdick relief on the ground of her supposed negligence would be a wide departure from principles laid down in numerous authorities in this State.
The principles laid down in Long v. Warren, and the cases upon which it rests, have never been applied in this State to a case where it is simply sought to make an instrument, which by mistake or fraud fails to express the prior agreement between the parties, conform to such agreement. The authority of that case should not be extended to cases not clearly within the principles there laid down. It is certainly not just that one who has perpetrated a fraud should be permitted to say to the party defrauded when he demands relief that he ought not to have believed or trusted him. Where one sues another for negligence, his own negligence contributing to the injury will constitute a defense to the action; but where one sues another for a positive, willful wrong or fraud, negligence by which the party injured exposed himself to the wrong or fraud will not bar relief. If the rule were otherwise, the unwary and confiding, who need the protection of the law the most, would be left a prey to the fraudulent and artful practices of evil-doers. *50
It is not to be feared that the rule as to the reformation of written instruments which we have herein laid down will lead to any serious mischief if the other well-established rule is observed, which requires that before any reformation of a written instrument can be had upon parol evidence of mistake or fraud, such evidence must be very clear and satisfactory.
The answer of Mrs. Burdick is quite prolix and verbose, but it contains allegations which, if true, would have furnished grounds for the relief she demands. She should, therefore, have been permitted to prove them.
The judgment should, therefore, be reversed, and a new trial granted, costs to abide event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.